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Google Fingers January 11, 2007

Posted by goss in Curiosit-es, WEB LOG.
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While Dan Cohen was looking at nineteenth-century books in Google’s massive digitization project realised that despite our perception of Google as a collection of computer geniuses, and despite their use of advanced scanning technology, their library project involves an almost unfathomable amount of physical labor. And witness to that stand some screenshots of his encounters while browsing the pages of a Victorian edition of Plato’s Euthyphron, a dialogue about the origin and nature of piety.

googlefinger-1.jpg

The good professor concluded “I’m glad that here and there, the people doing this difficult work (or at least their fingers) are being immortalized”. After all the root of the word “digitization” is “digit,” which is from the Latin word “digitus,” meaning finger.

And I would agree with him, but this next one I think actually contradicts the very goal of the project altogether if this is the preservation and accessibility of the original texts.

googlefinger-2.jpg

You be the judge! There are plenty more examples in Plato’s Euthyphron and in others.
And if you are curious (as I were) on how an actual book scanner works here’s a video of one in action.

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